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of "freedom, out, out, hosni mubarak." a very different group and a much more violent one. prayers start in a little less than eight hours. greta? >> greta: where is the american embases staff? are they still in -- in egypt? or have they been evacuated? >> reporter: there are two compounds here. you have the american embassy, guff over my left shoulder and then you have the living compound, which is about 30 minutes away and the staff is bused here every day in a secure bus. the main part of the staff, people who do consular affair, cultural attaches, nonessential staff are not necessarily at the embassy, but there is a contingent,-- the security staff, marines and other essential personnel who will be at the embasso tuesday night when the attack occurred, what their specific security arrangements are here, hard to say. typically, you have the host country providing the outer perimeter security. that failed on tuesday, obviously the egyptian military has greatly beefed up the security. have you an inner guard force, hired
of "freedom, out, out, hosni mubarak." a very different group and a much more violent one. prayers start in a little less than eight hours. greta? >> greta: where is the american embases staff? are they still in -- in egypt? or have they been evacuated? >> reporter: there are two compounds here. you have the american embassy, guff over my left shoulder and then you have the living compound, which is about 30 minutes away and the staff is bused here every day in a secure...
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Sep 22, 2012
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what do gaddafi and hosni mubarak have in common? to some degree they are allied with the united states. gaddafi is a thug but since 2002, a relatively well-behaved the. doing business with america, outing terrorists, paying reparations for the lockerbie bombing. mubarak was the biggest ally in the region not counting is real. they are out. who is in? assad is our deadly enemy. supporter of hezbollah and close ally of the mall ofs in iran. what is going on? do i have the temerity to suggest obama is actually -- that he hates america? trying to destroy the country? here is what he is trying to do. he is trying to reduce america's footprint in the middle east and in the world because he thinks we have been stepping on the world. how does he do that? the way he does that is by undermining america's allies and by allowing our enemies to gain strength. obama has done virtually nothing significant to block iran from getting a nuclear bomb. he is cutting america's nuclear arsenal. when america -- one obama came to power america had 11,000 w
what do gaddafi and hosni mubarak have in common? to some degree they are allied with the united states. gaddafi is a thug but since 2002, a relatively well-behaved the. doing business with america, outing terrorists, paying reparations for the lockerbie bombing. mubarak was the biggest ally in the region not counting is real. they are out. who is in? assad is our deadly enemy. supporter of hezbollah and close ally of the mall ofs in iran. what is going on? do i have the temerity to suggest...
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Sep 29, 2012
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this is the beginning of the book and also saying hosni mubarak didn't know what was happening that -- many people were arrested because they were in the west and they were arrested. they knew something was happening. the american ambassador sent a note to the american government saying there are young people who want to get to the hosni mubarak regime before september of 2011 so this was in 2008. three years before. we were not aware of what was happening but so many analysts dealing with the issue were saying egypt is going to implode because the economic situation the personal corruption, unemployment, poverty. they were there in tunisia. we have to look at the whole dimension with more critical take on what was said and the way it was covered by the media. the second thing i am trying to analyze is the discussion and the way we are looking and we are still looking at arab countries and muslim countries. as i was analyzing and trying to get a sense of the debates there's something we still have now and what we have now is a discussion about the debate. we reduce everything in the a
this is the beginning of the book and also saying hosni mubarak didn't know what was happening that -- many people were arrested because they were in the west and they were arrested. they knew something was happening. the american ambassador sent a note to the american government saying there are young people who want to get to the hosni mubarak regime before september of 2011 so this was in 2008. three years before. we were not aware of what was happening but so many analysts dealing with the...
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mubarak, an 80-year-old corrupt dictator who enriched himself while, you know, and just exposed all his people to pure misery was not the right way for this country to go in terms of positioning itself for the 21st century, and this guy -- i mean, his views which are sort of fun to pick apart, sort of debating points, the fact is they're very dangerous in terms of where it positions the u.s. in a fast-changing world. >> he does seem to think that everything went wrong with the election of president obama, but does mr. romney really expect us to believe that the islamic outrage and anger only started under this president? does he not recall in 1983 241 service personnel were killed at a marine barracks in beirut? does he not know ronald reagan was president at that point? >> he's obviously not studied world events or world history. the fact of the matter is the middle east demographically is going through a historic almost bib lickcle shift in terms of a new generation that folks of mubarak and dictators in other countries in that region were, again, hopelessly disconnected and out o
mubarak, an 80-year-old corrupt dictator who enriched himself while, you know, and just exposed all his people to pure misery was not the right way for this country to go in terms of positioning itself for the 21st century, and this guy -- i mean, his views which are sort of fun to pick apart, sort of debating points, the fact is they're very dangerous in terms of where it positions the u.s. in a fast-changing world. >> he does seem to think that everything went wrong with the election of...
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Sep 15, 2012
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mubarak and also wanted to assert their religious identity. the arab spring was an entire construction of mrs. clinton's mind and never really existed in the sense it was described. lou: secretary clinton saying that the ambassador has a loss to the arab spring. what is your reaction to those words and we have shared with the audience tonight? >> i think that clinton may know more about the middle east and jay carney, but not much. mrs. clinton has blood on her hands everywhere. they stuck the ambassador and his team into the middle of a city without guards and the city provided more suicide bombers in iraq than any country except for saudi arabia. her ambassador ran around syria for the better part of the year, encouraging them to protest, knowing that they would get shot down. this government seems to be trying to make the world a little safer as an anarchy more than anything else. lou: the idea that libya is now arrested four people in regards to that attack. could you explain about the earnest in earnest and honesty about their act? >> i a
mubarak and also wanted to assert their religious identity. the arab spring was an entire construction of mrs. clinton's mind and never really existed in the sense it was described. lou: secretary clinton saying that the ambassador has a loss to the arab spring. what is your reaction to those words and we have shared with the audience tonight? >> i think that clinton may know more about the middle east and jay carney, but not much. mrs. clinton has blood on her hands everywhere. they...
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mubarak to leave. this is a much less educated and poorer crowd. and clearly as we have seen the past 48 hour, the a much more violent and anti-american crowd. >> sean: leyland viter is in cairo. we are putting this administration and their reaction in the mideast under scrutiny. this is the administration that coined the term, overseas contingency operation and they were referring to man-caused disasters, if you remember those words, when talking about acts of terror. they appear to be buying into a narrative that the trailer for a low-budget anti-muslim film is responsible for the chaos in the streets in the middle-east, hence their apology yesterday. yet again today, before taking the time to condemn the ongoing violence or the death of the u.s. ambassador, christopher stevens, the secretary of state, hillary clinton, chose instead to rant about a phantom movie that may or may not exist. watch this. >> the united states government has nothing to do with this video. we absolutely reject its content a
mubarak to leave. this is a much less educated and poorer crowd. and clearly as we have seen the past 48 hour, the a much more violent and anti-american crowd. >> sean: leyland viter is in cairo. we are putting this administration and their reaction in the mideast under scrutiny. this is the administration that coined the term, overseas contingency operation and they were referring to man-caused disasters, if you remember those words, when talking about acts of terror. they appear to be...
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Sep 13, 2012
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allies, hosni mubarak and moammar khadafy. muammar al-qaddafi was providing us with invaluable intel intense what was happening in libya and the region. he did everything in his power to dislodge the two u.s. ally, knowing that the replacements would be muslim brotherhood-- >>> no. well, if they knew then i am angrier i. well, of course they knew-- >>> how did they know? >> the muslim brotherhood is the most important, dangerous and organized islamic organization in the world. >> sean: i said this from day one. a few of us said this. i have to bring brook in here. >> from day one, the muslim brotherhood has been clear-- >>> prepare for war with israel. >> this is our goal, with what he campaigned upon. we had a piece of legislation that resfrikt stricted funding egypt ushdz the muslim brother looed and of course, obama hillary clinton exercised a waiver and we continue to fund the muslim brotherhood. the same with the palestinian authority, when this joined up with hamas -- they exercised a waiver. >> sean: all of this is inco
allies, hosni mubarak and moammar khadafy. muammar al-qaddafi was providing us with invaluable intel intense what was happening in libya and the region. he did everything in his power to dislodge the two u.s. ally, knowing that the replacements would be muslim brotherhood-- >>> no. well, if they knew then i am angrier i. well, of course they knew-- >>> how did they know? >> the muslim brotherhood is the most important, dangerous and organized islamic organization in the...
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Sep 12, 2012
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after our former ally, dictatorship of hosni mubarak left, that they would be stable and continue to be our friend. if the new government isn't willing to control the anti-miles per hour elmets, that really raises a lot of questions. these are the kind of things that people talked about at the beginning of the arab spring transformation, what was going to happen when the islamist group came to power. would they be anti-american? what would happen? it took a wile for something like this to start bubbling up. this raises a lot of questions. you know, is the embassy safe? what about the future? >> bret: unless i missed it, did the president talk about egypt? >> no. >> bret: i didn't hear text -- >> only about benghazi. >> only about libya. >> i have a slight difference from charles on the video. i think the video was actually a trigger more than irrelevancy. this was an information operation. it was a planned event in cairo on the streets. and the real question i think one of the key questions going forward is going to be what did the egyptian government have to do with this if anything
after our former ally, dictatorship of hosni mubarak left, that they would be stable and continue to be our friend. if the new government isn't willing to control the anti-miles per hour elmets, that really raises a lot of questions. these are the kind of things that people talked about at the beginning of the arab spring transformation, what was going to happen when the islamist group came to power. would they be anti-american? what would happen? it took a wile for something like this to start...
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would each of to be better off with hosni mubarak? >> under hosni mubarak who had to go but there was economic growth. considerable economic growth. 8% economic growth. that is not the case now. what will happen next? just don't know. as a goes egypt so goes the region. dagen: thank you very much. connell: back to the markets. quarter until the hour as nicole petallides joins us from the stock exchange with movers. nicole: we talked about netflix and amazon and mcdonald's. we have more here that we are following. campbell's soup for example which came out with quarterly numbers and actors they beat the street with earnings per share the stock jumped to a new high a new see it is virtually flat looking at profits but we did see it jumped up and game stop is the clear winner as well. analysts have been talking about this and goldman sachs with the mutual talking about having great opportunities going into the back half of 2012-2013 new games coming down the pipeline. morgan stanley with an upgrade and there's a look at j.c. penney which
would each of to be better off with hosni mubarak? >> under hosni mubarak who had to go but there was economic growth. considerable economic growth. 8% economic growth. that is not the case now. what will happen next? just don't know. as a goes egypt so goes the region. dagen: thank you very much. connell: back to the markets. quarter until the hour as nicole petallides joins us from the stock exchange with movers. nicole: we talked about netflix and amazon and mcdonald's. we have more...
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mubarak, the silence seems to have given some kind of green light as to what is happening outside the embassy. yesterday you saw the very right-wing fringe belonging to people who identify as salafists. today a lot of the protesters or some of the protesters that were there are those the kind that are other at other embassy protests. this is not the first embassy protest that we've seen in egypt. but the point i want to emphasize in all of this is that it's imperative that we have a clear and strong statement from the egyptian government, which we have lacked so far. >> we'll check in with more with you throughout this hour and ian lee on the ground. we'll talk to you more on the ground. to libya reporting to us tonight from tripoli, the libyan capital, is cnnjomana karadsheh. what are you hearing about the killing of the four american diplomats. >> no reaction yet regarding the reaction by the united states. but, anderson, earlier today, we heard from senior government officials, the former prime minister, now of libya, and the speaker of parliament, holding a press conference, stron
mubarak, the silence seems to have given some kind of green light as to what is happening outside the embassy. yesterday you saw the very right-wing fringe belonging to people who identify as salafists. today a lot of the protesters or some of the protesters that were there are those the kind that are other at other embassy protests. this is not the first embassy protest that we've seen in egypt. but the point i want to emphasize in all of this is that it's imperative that we have a clear and...
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Sep 13, 2012
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mubarak, the silence seems to have given some kind of green light as to what is happening outside the embassy. yesterday you saw the very right-wing fringe belonging to people. today a lot of the protesters or some of the protesters that were there are those the kind that are other at other embassy protests. this is not the first embassy protest that we've seen in egypt. but the point i want to emphasize in all of this is that it's imperative that we have a clear and strong statement from the egyptian statement, which we have lacked so far. and what concerns me is that as we saw during the crisis when we had the mubarak regime basically position itself in the center and point to the islamic movement as the right-wing fringe, i'm now worried that our revolutionary president, mohammed mo mohammed mosi is doing the same thing. our ref lugs has a long way to do. the last thing we need to do is be derailed by a right wing in the u.s. right now we don't know who produced this film and it's not clear who called for the protests yesterday. for those in egypt who care about the revolution and
mubarak, the silence seems to have given some kind of green light as to what is happening outside the embassy. yesterday you saw the very right-wing fringe belonging to people. today a lot of the protesters or some of the protesters that were there are those the kind that are other at other embassy protests. this is not the first embassy protest that we've seen in egypt. but the point i want to emphasize in all of this is that it's imperative that we have a clear and strong statement from the...
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administrations supported the hosni mubarak dictatorship. there has been support for dictator against the people. what's been happening over the past few days is a complicated mix of right-wing fringe that produces in the u.s. to provoke and right-wing here in egypt calls for protest against this film that is deemed offensive against the prophet muhammad. what concerns me as an egyptian who wants to see our resolution succeed is that we do not get politically manipulated into these fictitious fights. we have a president from the muslim brotherhood movement who, at one point himself or his movement was being pointed to the right wing by that hosni mubar aak dictatorship. last thing we want is for our current president to start using another right wing to scare his allies into supporting him. this is the time to create jobs, not a time to play political football with people's sensitivities. >> there is the possibility that things might get worse in egypt? >> reporter: what concerns many of us is calls made supposedly from the muslim brotherhoo
administrations supported the hosni mubarak dictatorship. there has been support for dictator against the people. what's been happening over the past few days is a complicated mix of right-wing fringe that produces in the u.s. to provoke and right-wing here in egypt calls for protest against this film that is deemed offensive against the prophet muhammad. what concerns me as an egyptian who wants to see our resolution succeed is that we do not get politically manipulated into these fictitious...
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Sep 27, 2012
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mubarak was a democrat in the julian assange was a high-tech terrorist. it is disrespectful to the dead and to be incarcerated of bringing costs uprising to claim the united states supported the forces for change. that is indeed audacity. who can say it is not audacious to the president's concern to appear to look leaderly, look back on this change, the people's change, and tries to call it his own. we can take hours because it means the white house has seen this progress is inevitable. in this season of progress, the president has seen which way the wind is blowing. and he must pretend it is his in ministration who made it below. >> wikileaks founder julian assange addressing a side meeting of the u.n. general assembly wednesday night. for more, we're joined by michael ratner, legal advisor to julian assange and wikileaks. welcome to "democracy now!" talk about what he said and also this latest information that has come out under the freedom of information act that suggests the u.s. may be looking at julian assange as an enemy of the state. >> the point
mubarak was a democrat in the julian assange was a high-tech terrorist. it is disrespectful to the dead and to be incarcerated of bringing costs uprising to claim the united states supported the forces for change. that is indeed audacity. who can say it is not audacious to the president's concern to appear to look leaderly, look back on this change, the people's change, and tries to call it his own. we can take hours because it means the white house has seen this progress is inevitable. in this...
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remember the day hosni mubarak was toppleed. they assumed they wanted democracy somehow, they wanted what we have. they didn't, steve. and any student of foreign policy knows that the muslim brotherhood in egypt controls the mosques. they control the unions. we've heard that they have influenced the clerics that spurred that outburst yesterday. so listen, i think the administration went into this so naively during the arab spring, to just assume we can oust an ally and things would get better and they did the same thing basically in libya. now we are being attacked, our embassies are being attacked and what do we have the white house doing and the prop of the democratic party, the main stream media? going after mitt romney. there is no talk of what's happening or how we're going to fix this violence. >> steve: juan, ultimately it comes down to whatever our foreign policy is over there, and we've had a number of people on the program today who said, you know, essentially the policy is if anything, appeasement. that's why we're se
remember the day hosni mubarak was toppleed. they assumed they wanted democracy somehow, they wanted what we have. they didn't, steve. and any student of foreign policy knows that the muslim brotherhood in egypt controls the mosques. they control the unions. we've heard that they have influenced the clerics that spurred that outburst yesterday. so listen, i think the administration went into this so naively during the arab spring, to just assume we can oust an ally and things would get better...
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at the time they wanted their leader hosni mubarak gone. he's gone. now we have a president of egypt who is a member of the muslim brotherhood, mr. morsi. now we have a different crowd. we were told chanting death to america and burning the american flag. we saw that for ourselves a couple days ago. put it in perspective from what you saw then and what you see now. >> reporter: the pictures oddly enough look similar in that you have these running street battles, you have protesters going up against their own military what's different is this time what they want is originally it was some kind of democratic awakening and there was a secular liberal takeover of egypt and hosni mubarak needed to go because he was an oppressive dictator. now it's the united states who provides egypt with billions of doors of aid that is the target of these mass protests. it used to be the army was supposedly the friend of the protesters. not the case anymore as we hear these loud bangs out our balcony. megyn: the state department comes out and says egypt is an ally of the
at the time they wanted their leader hosni mubarak gone. he's gone. now we have a president of egypt who is a member of the muslim brotherhood, mr. morsi. now we have a different crowd. we were told chanting death to america and burning the american flag. we saw that for ourselves a couple days ago. put it in perspective from what you saw then and what you see now. >> reporter: the pictures oddly enough look similar in that you have these running street battles, you have protesters going...
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. >> hosni mubarak, right. we started doing business with moammar gadhafi during the bush administration. relationships with foreign leaders are not always necessarily a good thing either for the region or the flowering of democracy in that region or really for the united states. so i think it's arguable that the president doesn't need to as jonathan put it baby sit these leaders all the time. these sort of meetings that they're having now in a lot of ways are about the optics and i don't think that it was necessary for the president to pander to the jewish american vote meeting with netanyahu, because he's in a good place with that community. i don't think there were many imperatives for the president to sort of put on a show of taking care of this leader or that leader. he's also made it a point of his foreign policy to give america enough distance from some of the gulf states if a revolution takes place there we have the freedom to take the side of the opposition. >> also right, nobody is voting on this issu
. >> hosni mubarak, right. we started doing business with moammar gadhafi during the bush administration. relationships with foreign leaders are not always necessarily a good thing either for the region or the flowering of democracy in that region or really for the united states. so i think it's arguable that the president doesn't need to as jonathan put it baby sit these leaders all the time. these sort of meetings that they're having now in a lot of ways are about the optics and i don't...
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we didn't have a good deal with hosni mubarak. now it's easy to say it was better under the dictator. it was terrible then. and it is terrible today. >> should the u.s. congress continue to appropriate $1.5 billion a year in various forms of military -- mostly military, but some economic assistance to egypt? >> you know, i t haven't thought about that fully. the time may have come to be brave. for american policy to risk, if you will, offending the egyptians and to risk calling this relationship for what it is. and to risk going to the egyptians and asking them for an alliance or a friendship worth the investment we have in egypt. we always feared that somehow or another we pulled the plug on the egyptian military that all hell would break loose. we should have more courage. we should expect a better deal and a better relationship. >> fouad ajami, as usual, thank you very much. >>> our national security adviser just saw ambassador stevens in libya just two weeks ago. her firsthand account is coming up in our next hour. ♪ ♪ ♪
we didn't have a good deal with hosni mubarak. now it's easy to say it was better under the dictator. it was terrible then. and it is terrible today. >> should the u.s. congress continue to appropriate $1.5 billion a year in various forms of military -- mostly military, but some economic assistance to egypt? >> you know, i t haven't thought about that fully. the time may have come to be brave. for american policy to risk, if you will, offending the egyptians and to risk calling this...
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hosni mubarak and gaddafi who provided valuable intelligence to the united states. both of those allies are gone. the replacements are al qaeda and the muslim brotherhood and other islamists. this is dangerous not just for us but are key ally in the region which is israel and the fact that this president confined time to meet with david letterman but benjamin not yahoo!. -- president obama got 70% of the jewish vote in 2008. number could drop. how much money from the jewish community will still flow to president obama this year. it started with this. >> delegates opposed say no. i will do that one more time. all those delegates opposed say no. the motion is adopted and the platform is amended as shown on screen. stuart: right now we are monitoring the situation across the middle east as europe and cairo, muslim brotherhood called out a massive protests. protesters scuffled with police outside the u.s. embassy earlier. there have been incidents in lebanon, yemen and sudan. good for the price of oil if you see property up $99.75. and ben bernanke's plan to print more
hosni mubarak and gaddafi who provided valuable intelligence to the united states. both of those allies are gone. the replacements are al qaeda and the muslim brotherhood and other islamists. this is dangerous not just for us but are key ally in the region which is israel and the fact that this president confined time to meet with david letterman but benjamin not yahoo!. -- president obama got 70% of the jewish vote in 2008. number could drop. how much money from the jewish community will still...
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we all grew up in a middle east where you had these strong men, the hosni mubaraks. >> should they have made that statement? should the president have made that -- i know mitt romney and everybody else is saying, you know, attack, slash, burn. should we have made a statement this early that the egyptians are, quote, not our ally? >> well, the answer is they're both. the egyptians -- it's a relationship that's yet to be redefined under the new leadership. >> right. >> what i think we want to say is you've got to prove this. we ought to have conditional relationships. we ought not to have automatic relationships with their friends where we look the other way, increasing our relationships in the middle east need to be conditional on their behavior. we don't have now a history, a pattern. >> do we give egyptians $1.3 billion next year? >> only if certain conditions are met. we look at the way they treat minorities, the 10 million c coptic christians, whether they honor their treaty, the way they combat terrorism, what they do politically, whether they are moving in a democratic direction. w
we all grew up in a middle east where you had these strong men, the hosni mubaraks. >> should they have made that statement? should the president have made that -- i know mitt romney and everybody else is saying, you know, attack, slash, burn. should we have made a statement this early that the egyptians are, quote, not our ally? >> well, the answer is they're both. the egyptians -- it's a relationship that's yet to be redefined under the new leadership. >> right. >>...
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mubarak and those like mahmoud ahmadinejad but lost in the din is the quiet minority bleaker still the majority that needs some power of america and the west to defend them and stand by them from the grassroots up but they are not getting any attention. they are not having riots and they had demonstrations in libya at the washington post and yet we have been ignoring them because the president doesn't want to make a case for liberty. the president wants to stay away from meeting with leaders of the free world and seeing we're not only behind them but want to lead from the front for the change and tipping point towards freedom and not be pushed around by bullies like iran and continued to see genocide as they're doing in syria and worrying about election politics or whatever formulation he is using but it is a post american era and the majority of muslims are waiting for that leadership. stuart: how would people like yourself, how would moderate muslims respond if israel with america's help attacked iran and attempted to destroy its nuclear facilities? what would be your response? >> fo
mubarak and those like mahmoud ahmadinejad but lost in the din is the quiet minority bleaker still the majority that needs some power of america and the west to defend them and stand by them from the grassroots up but they are not getting any attention. they are not having riots and they had demonstrations in libya at the washington post and yet we have been ignoring them because the president doesn't want to make a case for liberty. the president wants to stay away from meeting with leaders of...
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mubarak's egypt. the president went to cairo with a speech with other goals, and even people that -- who may not be discussed in polite company anymore, like president assad, were the recipients of efforts to romance them diplomatic include during the early months and year of this administration, owl of which has been dumped at arab spring has been -- as the u.s. and the administration has tended to adopt the arab spring. does the u.s. have the credibility in the arab world to be a proponent of democracy in this arab spring movement or does it have to take advantage of it in a more subtle way? the sense i get from the administration they feel the latter is the case. they can't full on take advantage of it but have to do it much more carefully, because the u.s. credibility as a result of various things, dating back to the bush administration and earlier, is kind of damaged there. >> well, i think the big question on the table is, within this institution deals with the bad guys. how do you deal with ter
mubarak's egypt. the president went to cairo with a speech with other goals, and even people that -- who may not be discussed in polite company anymore, like president assad, were the recipients of efforts to romance them diplomatic include during the early months and year of this administration, owl of which has been dumped at arab spring has been -- as the u.s. and the administration has tended to adopt the arab spring. does the u.s. have the credibility in the arab world to be a proponent of...
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Sep 12, 2012
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mubarak and muammar gadhafi in libya, and we are grateful, so i'm offend bid this did hes incarceration of our embassy and desecration of the american flag. we should be expressing ourselves as sproesing gratitude to america, to the american people, to the american muslims that have been very robust in their attempts to help our government advance the cause of democracy in that part of the world. >> all right. appreciate your perspective as always. thank you. good to see you. >> thank you, suzanne. >> sure. >>> mitt romney quick to criticize the obama administration for not expressing outrage over the killing of ambassador stevens fast enough. we're going to take a look at the timeline. don't forget, can you watch cnn live on your computer, while you're at work. cnn.com/tv. [ rosa ] i'm rosa and i quit smoking with chantix. when the doctor told me that i could smoke for the first week... i'm like...yeah, ok... little did i know that one week later i wasn't smoking. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix is proven to help people quit smoking. it reduces the urge to smoke. some pe
mubarak and muammar gadhafi in libya, and we are grateful, so i'm offend bid this did hes incarceration of our embassy and desecration of the american flag. we should be expressing ourselves as sproesing gratitude to america, to the american people, to the american muslims that have been very robust in their attempts to help our government advance the cause of democracy in that part of the world. >> all right. appreciate your perspective as always. thank you. good to see you. >>...
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Sep 21, 2012
09/12
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the peaceful ab today caution of hosni mubarak and also in tunisia. the arab spring can reap some very bitter fruit as we can see. i am not ruling out democracy in these countries but it is not going to be an easy battle. martha: the next question becomes, if this is as you say, perhaps, and that would be a hopeful way to look at it that there is a road to democracy here, what role county u.s. play and should we be hearing more from the president, from the secretary of state in light of what is going on? [chanting] >> i think it's a great question. i think we have to be as heavily engaged as we can. i hope very much that the tragic murder of my friend, chris stevens and his colleagues doesn't lead us into a retrenchment. they need us right now to engage with them, engage with those who want to see better outcomes for their countries to encourage them to give them the benefit of our experience, including in the region, some of the hard experience, but we've got to be on the scene diplomatically, with our ngo's, we have to be engaged. martha: you know,
the peaceful ab today caution of hosni mubarak and also in tunisia. the arab spring can reap some very bitter fruit as we can see. i am not ruling out democracy in these countries but it is not going to be an easy battle. martha: the next question becomes, if this is as you say, perhaps, and that would be a hopeful way to look at it that there is a road to democracy here, what role county u.s. play and should we be hearing more from the president, from the secretary of state in light of what is...